Archives Contain Last Will and Testament of First
Speaker

There was a time in the British parliamentary tradition when the Speaker of the House of Commons (Assembly) was the most
important member of the House. Such was the case in Newfoundland in 1833 when the first legislature convened after the
granting of representative government. Under representative government the House of Assembly had little power, with control
mainly in the hands of the British-appointed governor and his appointed council of advisers. There was no premier or
government leader other than the governor. As a result the Speaker was the spokesman for the only elected body in
Newfoundland, the House of Assembly.

John Bingley Garland

Garland was the first person to hold the position of Speaker in Newfoundland's House of Assembly.

Courtesy of Archives and Special Collections, Queen Elizabeth II Library, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL.

John Bingley Garland was the first person to hold the position of Speaker in Newfoundland's House of Assembly.
He was born in Poole, England, the son of Amy Lester and George Garland, in 1791. The senior Garland had inherited
from his father-in-law, Benjamin Lester, one of the largest and most prosperous mercantile establishments involved
in the Newfoundland fish trade. The company was based in Poole, with its Newfoundland headquarters in Trinity.

John Bingley Garland and his younger brother, George Junior, entered into partnership with their father in 1819.
They were immediately dispatched to Trinity to manage the company property in Newfoundland. Shortly after their
arrival in Trinity they were both appointed as justices of the peace, and were soon involved in the building of
St. James Church of England Church.

Last Will and Testament

The last will and testament of John Bingley Garland. His will reveals his wealth and generosity.

Courtesy of Archives and Special Collections (MF-135), Queen Elizabeth II Library, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL.

In 1821, after only two years in Newfoundland, John returned to Poole, where he spent the next 11 years working for the
family business. It is believed that he travelled to Newfoundland during that period, but his place of residence was Poole, as he
was elected mayor of that town in 1824 and in 1830. George Garland Senior retired from the business in 1822 and George
Junior left in 1830, resulting in John becoming sole proprietor. He entered into a partnership with St. John's businessmen
George R. Robinson and Thomas Brooking around this time.

In 1832 Garland and his family returned to Trinity to live, possibly in response to the granting of representative government in
Newfoundland. He may have been concerned about the effect this move would have on his business interests. Later that year
Garland was elected the first member of the House of Assembly to represent Trinity Bay district. He may have been elected by
acclamation, but even if he was not, his return would not have been a surprise, despite his short residency, because his
company employed or bought fish from most of the electors in the district, and voting was by public ballot.

Shortly after his election, Garland moved to St. John's. When the House of Assembly opened in January 1833, he was chosen
as the first Speaker. Later that year he resigned his seat, and was appointed to the Executive Council by Gov. Thomas
Cochrane. Despite this appointment and his growing business concerns, he left Newfoundland and returned to Poole in 1834,
after which his interest in his Newfoundland business appears to have gone into decline. He dissolved his partnership with
Robinson and Brooking, and sold some of his holdings.

John Bingley Garland married Deborah Vallis in 1822; after her death, he married Fanny Marie Read, who survived him. He
fathered at least seven children: Rev. George Vallis Garland; Rev. Lester Lester (who changed his name from Garland to Lester
to carry on the Lester family name); Amy Pyper; Marie Georgina Cass; Eileen Blanche Plumtree; Margaret Deborah Cooksley;
Frances Augusta Swinny. Garland died at Stone Cottage, Wimborne, on July 12, 1875.

In 1979 the Centre for Newfoundland Studies acquired an original copy of the last will and testament of John Bingley Garland,
one of two or three which would have been made at the time it was written. It contains the actual will dated Oct. 27, 1871,
together with two codicils and letters testimonial. It measures 30.25 x 24 inches (77 x 61 cm) and is handwritten on vellum. The
will is an interesting document, revealing not only how Garland disposed of his property but also acting as an inventory of his
possessions. He was both a wealthy and a generous man, leaving property to his wife, daughters, grandchildren, servants and
friends -- in addition to his two sons, to whom most of his estate devolved. Of particular note are bequests of money to his
daughters which were to be "for their sole and separate use free from the debts or control of their respective husbands."